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Slick Honiball dwarfs Little

Tony Wallace
Sunday 14 November 1999 00:00 GMT
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Matt Moore enjoyed an unusually relaxing sleep on Friday, safe in the knowledge that he would not have to spend yesterday afternoon throwing himself in front of the runaway All Black train called Jonah Lomu.

Matt Moore enjoyed an unusually relaxing sleep on Friday, safe in the knowledge that he would not have to spend yesterday afternoon throwing himself in front of the runaway All Black train called Jonah Lomu.

Having spent the early part of the week having nightmares about how he was going to deal with this particular threat to his manhood, Moore, Sale's right-winger, had only Spencer Brown in his sights; the unconfirmed belief being that Brown is keeping Lomu's place warm until the big man returns from New Zealand to fulfil a two-year contract with Bristol.

Bristol's coach, Bob Dwyer, would not add to the speculation about Lomu's move but said: "Jonah and his agent have said that they have rejected all other offers from English clubs. If he is to play in England, he will play for Bristol."

Moore almost scored a try in the left corner as Sale mounted their only prolonged period of pressure in the first half. By then Bristol had scored the first of their two tries, and Sale were trying desperately to do something meaningful about their woeful defence, the weaknesses in which were exploited to the full by Henry Honiball.

While there was no Lomu to excite a crowd, which may well have been larger had the local police not requested a 4pm kick-off to avoid the end of the Manchester City game, there were debutants at outside-half for both teams: Honiball for Bristol and Nicky Little for Sale.

Of the two, Honiball was infinitely the more assured. The big South African set up both first-half tries for Jamie Mayer as the notoriously lax Sale defence went walkabout on each occasions, and Honiball converted twice. Little's contribution was to fire two penalties wide of the right upright, which spoiled the good impression he made in general play.

Bristol will not forgive themselves for letting slip a 14-point advantage as they were preparing for the half-time whistle. They then suffered a lack of concentration on a similar scale to both Sale's defensive lapses. Sale had not been able to establish a worthwhile field position and maintain it for long enough to put pressure on the Bristol defence. When they did, Craig Turvey skipped through the Bristol cover for a soft touchdown, which Steve Davidson converted.

After the interval Honiball was able to give free rein to his attacking instincts, scoring two tries himself, converting one, plus Jim Brownrigg's touchdown, as Sale were trying to find sufficient sticking plaster to cover over the gaps. Andy Morris got a try for Sale and Davidson a penalty. But when Augustin Pichot raced in from 40 metres for Honiball to convert, Sale were hopelessly adrift, never to recover.

Sale: J. Shaw; M Moore, J Baxendell (capt), B-J Mather, S Davidson; N Little, C Turvey (C Saverimutto, 72); D Bell (P Winstanley, 72), P Greening (P Smith, 72), D Theron, M Tinnock (D Baldwin, 57), A Whittle, A Sanderson, A Morris, J Brand (G Manson-Bishop, 56).

Bristol: C McMullen; D Dewdney, E Simone, J Mayer, S Brown (A Cadwallader, 50); H Honiball, A Pichot; A Sharp, B Williams, D Crompton, O Booyse, D Ryan (capt), S Fenn (C Evans, 48), A Vander, J Brownrigg.

Referee: B Campsall (Halifax).

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